Patrick Awuah wins conference's top prize as leading minds discuss fake news and education in a 'post-truth' world.

Some of the world's leading thinkers in the fields of education, technology and economic development convened here for the eighth World Innovation Summit for Education (WISE).

About 2,000 participants from more than 100 countries will attend the two-day summit that started on Wednesday which, since its establishment in 2009, has become a premier international gathering on the future of education.

"Education needs to give students the tools to become immune to media and cultural impositions," Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, chairperson of Qatar Foundation for Education (QF), said at the start of the conference.

"Issues in education demand that we examine rising phenomena and changes around us, and, when necessary, even examine education itself."

Sheikha Moza also highlighted the blockade that was imposed on Qatar on June 5.

"Some wanted to make matters difficult for us, yet it was only difficult for them. They wanted us to change, yet we remain unchanged," she said.

Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt and Bahrain cut ties with Qatar in the summer and imposed a land, sea and air embargo, accusing it of supporting "terrorism".

Speaking on education in a post-truth world, CNN host Fareed Zakaria said: "The world is facing a difficult and daunting challenge in the wake of Donald Trump's electoral victory.

"Trump's part of a trend, you have Brexit in the UK, and the rise of the far-right... This phenomenon is concentrated to a few countries. It's not happening in Asia, or Latin America, it's in the western world - countries that are doing well economically.

"What these western countries like the US, Poland, Germany all have in common are immigrants - and what we're witnessing is a reaction to that cultural change.

"In this new world, technology is playing a pernicious role... The only thing that can stop the decline of civilisation is facts and education.

"Facts are becoming a victim and a boring truth. We cannot live in a world where black is white and white is black," said Zakaria.

'Advancing Africa'

This year's conference saw Patrick Awuah, who created a state-of-the-art university in his native Ghana, receive the conference's top prize - a gold medal and $500,000.

Awuah said he quit his highly lucrative job as an engineer with tech giant Microsoft to help "advance Africa".

"When I was working at Microsoft, I wasn't doing it for the excitement of the engineering. Me and my colleagues, we were doing it because we wanted to change the world," he said.

"That spirit of changing the world is consistent with how we change the world by helping Africa to advance."

His university Ashesi, which celebrated its 15th anniversary this year, offers degrees in business, computer science and engineering.